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A drive-through McDonald's in Los Angeles, March 1983.

A drive-thru McDonald’s in Los Angeles, March 1983. Barbara Alper/Getty Images
  • The first McDonald’s franchise opened in Des Plaines, Illinois, on April 15, 1955.
  • Chicken nuggets were introduced to the menu in 1983.
  • Motorhead and President Ronald Reagan were photographed eating at McDonald’s in the 1980s.

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By the 1980s, McDonald’s was already a well-established fast-food chain with an iconic menu and signature branding.

Ray Kroc opened the first McDonald’s franchise location in Des Plaines, Illinois, on April 15, 1955. That year, he founded McDonald’s System, Inc., which would become the McDonald’s Corporation we know today. 

Ny 1958, McDonald’s had sold 100 million burgers, and the restaurants had taken on a signature design style that prominently featured the chain’s iconic “golden arches.”

The 1980s were a major period of growth for McDonald’s.

According to a Deseret News report from 1990, McDonald’s restaurant sales reached $1.62 million in 1989, compared to $1 million in 1979, and sales outside the US grew from $900 million in 1979 to $5.3 billion in 1989.

While some aspects of eating at McDonald’s have remained the same, some feel like iconically ’80s.

Here’s what it was like to eat at McDonald’s in the 1980s.

Some McDonald’s restaurants in the 1980s retained the original restaurant design from the 1950s and ’60s.

A McDonald’s restaurant in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1980, had the signature golden arches. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Architect Stanley Meston designed the original look for McDonald’s restaurants, which featured a red-and-white color scheme. When the McDonald brothers first saw the design for their new restaurant, they were concerned that the roof was too flat.

Meston recommended adding the now-iconic golden arches to the building’s roof to create a more dimensional look. Downey, California, is the oldest still-operating restaurant featuring the original red-and-white design.

While some restaurants continued to feature the golden arches, other storefronts looked more modern.

The exterior of a branch of a McDonald’s in London in 1985 looks like some locations today. Harry Dempster/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

This London restaurant, pictured in 1985, looks remarkably similar to urban McDonald’s restaurants of today. 

Some restaurants were built into large colonial-looking buildings.

People ate outside McDonald’s in August 1985. Steve Liss/Getty Images

This outdoor courtyard with its wooden tables and benches looks quite different from most McDonald’s seating areas now.

Employees wore striped bowling-style shirts and hats.

An employee puts orders onto a conveyor belt which delivers food to the drive-in section of the McDonald’s restaurant in 1984. Alan Gilbert Purcell/Fairfax Media/Getty Images

Today, employees often wear T-shirts that reflect the chain’s most popular and current promotions, like the Travis Scott or Saweetie meals, or grey polos with yellow accents.

Even then-President Ronald Reagan was photographed chowing down on a McDonald’s burger.

President Ronald Reagan enjoyed a Big Mac during a brief campaign stop in 1984. Bettmann/Getty Images

According to the Tuscaloosa News, customers were caught off guard when Reagan made an unplanned stop at the Alabama McDonald’s in 1984.

“The President of the United States ordered a Big Mac, a large order of fries and sweet tea, proffered a $20 bill from his right front pant pocket, got his $17.54 in change, and looked around for a place to enjoy his meal,” a reporter on the scene later wrote in 2006. 

When asked about the last time he had eaten at McDonald’s, Reagan replied that it was before he “got this job.”

“But I kind of miss it sometimes,” he continued. “I figured as long as I had the opportunity, I might as well take advantage of it and stop.”

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